Leidy Klotz and his 3-year-old son, Ezra, were building a bridge out of Legos when they ran into a little engineering trouble: One support tower was taller than the other, making it difficult to build a span in between. Klotz turned around to grab a block to add to the shorter tower, but his son took a different approach: He pulled a block out of the taller tower. He subtracted. A clever solution, and a pretty simple one, too. So why hadn’t Klotz — Klotz, of all people — thought of it? A University of Virginia professor with appointments in the schools of engineering, architecture, and busines...
Quantum computing uses its “spooky” principles to tackle problems that are too complex for traditional computing. While traditional computers represent every operation in binary digits, or bits (zeros and ones), qubits (quantum bits) offer an infinitely faster method since they have no fixed state. Tech giants like Microsoft and Alphabet have been racing to build useful quantum computers, but IBM just signed a partnership that could vault it to the top of the pack in the health care space. To understand why it is such a leap forward, it’s helpful to find a clear-cut comparison. University of V...
Overall, virus cases continue to plateau around Virginia, UVA’s COVID-19 Model reported in its Friday update. The Lord Fairfax district is still one of 13 health districts reflecting a slow growth of cases while most of Virginia reports a plateau or a decline in the growth trajectory of new cases. Only the Mount Rogers Health District in southwestern Virginia is showing a new surge in cases.
In a report Friday, researchers at UVA’s Biocomplexity Institute, which monitors COVID-19 trends, said that while the circulating variants are a concern, “vaccine hesitancy is the largest long-term risk to containing the impact of the pandemic.”
COVID-19 variants are contributing to a growing number of cases. By the end of March, the state had identified more than 100 cases of the B.1.1.7 variant — also known as the UK variant — and 25 cases of B.1.351, a variant first discovered in South Africa. There’s a significant lag in identifying those strains, so real numbers are likely far higher, according to Bryan Lewis, a computational epidemiologist at UVA’s Biocomplexity Institute.
If we don’t prepare for the next pandemic, we may not be as lucky as we were with COVID-19, a team of international researchers led by a University of Virginia professor says.
The University of Virginia, a UNESCO World Heritage site, had paused its historical tours during the pandemic. No matter. We'd toured the Grounds before and knew our way around. The new Memorial to Enslaved Laborers packed an emotional punch. An elliptical granite ring, representing shackles, is inscribed with the names of a some of the more than 4,000 enslaved African Americans who built and toiled at the University.
Despite Johnson and Johnson's roll outs expecting to decline 85% next week, UVA Health officials say there will still be enough vaccines to go around for those who want one.
Despite Johnson and Johnson's roll outs expecting to decline 85% next week, UVA Health officials say there will still be enough vaccines to go around for those who want one.
Starting April 19, students at the University of Virginia will be receiving an email UVA Health to sign up for a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. “Student workers should have received invitations this week, and then all UVA students will receive invitations next week,” UVA Health Chief Executive Officer Wendy Horton said.
On Friday, there was a moment of silence at UVA for the completion of a nearly two-year project, the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers. Deteasa Brown Gathers, a Memorial to Enslaved Laborers Community Engagement Committee member, said she feels, "gratitude. Resilience. Resilience of the ancestors. Resilience of the descendants.” Also on Friday, the final addition to the memorial, a stream of water, was revealed.
he Memorial to Enslaved Laborers at the University of Virginia is finally complete. The people that have worked for years to bring it to life marked Friday with silence, poetry, and the sound of running water.
A memorial to enslaved workers who built the University of Virginia was officially dedicated Saturday, a year after the COVID-19 pandemic canceled its official unveiling.
On Saturday, UVA held a virtual dedication for its Memorial to Enslaved Laborers, reflecting on the names and titles of those who built the university eternalized in its stone.
Seeing her great-great-great-uncle Peyton Skipwith’s name carved into the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers at the University of Virginia fills Carole Malone’s heart “with pride and sadness.” “Peyton, along with 4,000 to 5,000 known and unknown patriots and citizens, toiled at UVA under unspeakable horrors and oppression to carve out a life of dignity and hope for their families and descendants,” she said. With virtual and in-person recognition, a long-planned memorial to enslaved people who built and worked at the university was officially dedicated Saturday.
(Commentary) On April 13, as the University of Virginia observes the 278th anniversary of the birth of the school’s father, Thomas Jefferson, it is interesting to consider the man who arguably could be called UVA’s “grandfather,” George Wythe.
The UVA Medical Center has had some of the highest known costs so far, as it has helped to administer more than 25,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses at the Seminole Square vaccine clinic and a total of more than 40,000 doses across the region when including other vaccination sites.
UVA students will receive invitations [this] week to get their COVID-19 vaccinations as school officials try to get shots in the arms of students, staff and faculty before the semester’s end.
The Rotunda is the centerpiece of the University of Virginia’s idyllic campus, a building designed by Thomas Jefferson, who modeled it after the Pantheon in Rome, as he sought to build a school that embraced rigorous intellectualism and egalitarianism. But in a grotesque contradiction, enslaved laborers brought that vision to life. The Rotunda now has a brick-and-mortar counterpoint, a memorial where visitors can honor the lives of the 4,000 enslaved people whose forced labor built the stately campus.
Judithe Little is an American award-winning and best-selling author of two historical novels, “Wickwythe Hall” with “The Chanel Sisters” being her latest literary offering. She grew up in Virginia and earned a Bachelor of Arts in foreign affairs from UVA. After studying at the Institute of European Studies and the Institut Catholique in Paris, France, and interning at the U.S. State Departmen, she earned a law degree from the UVA School of Law.